Recently, I delved into Google’s updated AI Max reporting guidance, which sheds new light on the AI-driven future of Search campaigns.
Google has revitalized its AI Max for Search reporting documentation, offering advertisers fresh insights into performance reporting, optimization best practices, and significant timelines for Dynamic Search Ads (DSA).
The most striking update is that campaigns using Dynamic Search Ads (DSA) will automatically transition to AI Max starting in February 2027.
What’s happening? Google has expanded its help documentation for AI Max for Search campaigns, enriching the guidance on reporting and offering more details on campaign performance evaluation.
Though it doesn’t introduce new products, it clarifies how Google intends for us, as advertisers, to manage and interpret AI Max campaigns in the future.
Why this matters. This update offers insight into Google’s long-term vision for AI Max and the impending phaseout of DSA. With automatic DSA upgrades set for early 2027, it’s crucial for us to anticipate the necessary evolutions in our Search strategies.
The headline change: Google has officially outlined the transition from Dynamic Search Ads to AI Max in the help documentation.
Per the updated guidance, DSA campaigns will undergo automatic upgrades to AI Max beginning in February 2027, as Google aims to broaden the adoption of AI-powered Search campaign formats.
What’s new in reporting: Google introduced new reporting views that let us evaluate performance across several dimensions:
- Search terms.
- Search terms and landing pages from AI Max.
- Search terms from Dynamic Search Ads.
- Search terms and landing pages from Dynamic Search Ads.
They’ve clarified that search term reports reflect user destinations post-ad click and introduced options for excluding underperforming search terms or landing pages with negative keywords and URLs.
New guidance for travel advertisers: Google also introduced a section specifically for Search Campaigns related to Travel.
This documentation helps us consolidate performance data into a unified view, crucial for evaluating search terms, inventory performance, and conversion outcomes. Travel advertisers can further dissect reports by ad format to compare performance across different types of ads like Travel Promotion Ads, Booking Links, and Travel Feed-based ads.
A shift in optimization philosophy: The latest best practices emphasize targeting based on intent rather than focusing strictly on keyword matches.
Google now advises us to:
- Prioritize conversion goals over mere keyword relevance.
- Regularly review search term and item group performance every one to two weeks.
- Use negative keywords judiciously.
- Avoid over-filtering traffic to exploit AI-driven intent matching benefits.
Bottom line: Google’s documentation update serves as more than just a guide for reporting; it lays out a strategic path for us to navigate an AI Max-centric future as DSAs near their fadeout.
Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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